|
Non-volatile random access memory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Non-volatile random access memory ( NVRAM ) is the general name used to describe any type of random access memory which does not lose its information when power is turned off. This is in contrast t...
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Non-volatile_random_access_memory |
|||
|
Random-access memory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
|
|||
|
|||
|
|||
|
|||
|
Also see our Fast Guide to RAM. ... Nonvolatile (sometimes written as "non-volatile") storage (NVS) - also known as nonvolatile memory or nonvolatile random access memory (NVRAM) - is a form of static random access memory whose contents are saved when a computer is turned off or loses its external power source.
|
|||
|
Short-term memory is a lot like volatile RAM. If you don't immediately store the memory into long-term data memory (a process known as "encoding"), the memory soon disappears. Consider that it is very difficult for most human beings to remember a sequence of numbers beyond seven in a row.
|
|||
|
That's the promise of Atom Chip Corporation for the Consumer Electronic Show (CES) held in Las Vegas in January 2006. The computer should demonstrate how Quantum and Quantum-optical devices could operate in consumer electronics. ... Without proper benchmarking, it is hard to tell if the "AtomChip" ... If AtomChip can pull this off,
|
|||
|
View details on FM25V10, a 1M bit ferroelectric nonvolatile RAM memory device with an SPI interface for fast read/writes and low power needs. ... 512K bit Ferroelectric Nonvolatile RAM; • Organized as 65,536 x 8 bits; • High Endurance 100 Trillion (1e14) Read/Writes; • 10 year Data Retention; • NoDelay Writes;
|
Copyright © 2009, Dictionary.com, LLC. All rights reserved.